Its definately not a gtb turbo.
third génération1 vnt202 gt20**3gtb gta...
This is a little off topic, but i just unstuck my vanes on vnt15 and massaged my linkage a little more, and man its is just nuts to drive. My linkage is set up as per Andrews instructions, with a boost can spring rate that correctly matches my boost limits. When it spools if im not in 1st (which it will peg a 20 pound gauge) It goes to 15 almost instantly and stay there. The learning curve for today is, is that when plumbing the inline boost can be sure and use as big of lines that you can, initially i used a pretty small line to supply it and it would over boost very easily until it could flow the required volume. Also Zero runout in the linkage is crucial or the vanes will soot up and not allow it to return to idle and be very annoying. But i am sold on running an operating fully functioning control setup regardless of the effort it takes to achieve it.
8x8 map for VNT & LDA control Use N75 solenoid based actuators Live configuration via USB interface and graphical map editor (no special software needed) Two VNT control modes: * Duty Cycle map - Uses RPM/TPS info to set VNT actuator position. Additional dampening can be added to improve engine response. No map sensor needed for this setup. * Target Pressure map - Specify requested pressure value on each control point. Vnt-lda will automatically move actuator until required pressure level is reached. LDA table can be used to fine tune soot emissions and torque limiting on certain RPM-range. Cheap and free :-)
* RPM Engine speed sensor, use Honeywell GT101DC or alternator W-output as a source. * TPS Throttle position sensor (like Bosch "001") * MAP Manifold absolute pressure sensor for detecting amount of boost, for example 4bar Freescale MPX6400 * Arduino AVR-microcontroller board, servos, n75 (or similiar) solenoid & vacuum actuators
Anything more conclusive??? It's been a week or so right? U usually do everything fast